- Trump regime in talks for potential bailout of Spirit Airlines
Source: US News & World Report
“The Trump administration is in advanced talks about a potential rescue of low-cost carrier Spirit Airlines, which is struggling to exit bankruptcy, people familiar with the matter told Reuters. The discussions underscore one of the unintended consequences of the Iran war launched by Washington: a surge in jet fuel prices that is rippling through the aviation industry, squeezing margins and pushing weaker airlines closer to the brink. Fuel costs have roughly doubled since the conflict began, forcing carriers to raise fares, cut flights and scramble to preserve cash. For Spirit, which was already struggling to turn a profit before the fuel shock, the spike has intensified doubts about whether it can survive on its own. The U.S. government is weighing a financing package that could include lending the airline up to $500 million in exchange for warrants, the Wall Street Journal reported.” (04/22/26)
- Documents: Two Iranian women abducted by ICE are not, in fact, related to Qasem Soleimani
Source: Drop Site
“Two Iranian women remain in immigration detention, [abducted] earlier this month on accusations of being the niece and grandniece of Qasem Soleimani, despite no connection to the late Iranian military commander. Drop Site reviewed Iranian birth records, identification papers, a family will, and other personal documents and found no connection whatsoever to him or his extended family. One of the women is now seriously ill in a Texas facility, her chronic blood condition left effectively untreated. On March 8, right-wing activist Laura Loomer posted on X calling for the deportation of a woman she claimed was Soleimani’s niece. The commander of the Quds Force of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Maj. Gen. Soleimani was assassinated by a U.S. drone strike, ordered by U.S. President Donald Trump, in Baghdad on January 3, 2020. … On April 3, Hamideh Soleimani Afshar and her daughter, Sarina Hosseiny, [abducted] by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) at their home outside Los Angeles.” (04/22/26)
https://www.dropsitenews.com/p/iranian-women-ice-detention-not-related-qasem-soleimani-rubio-loomer
- US regime charges Southern Poverty Law Center over payments to informants
Source: BBC News [UK state media]
“US officials have announced fraud charges against the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), a civil rights group that tracks extremist organisations and played a prominent role in confronting the Ku Klux Klan (KKK). In a news conference on Tuesday, Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche accused the non-profit of secretly funding the very groups that it says it opposes, through paying informants who infiltrated them — including within the KKK. An indictment charges the SPLC with six counts of wire fraud, four counts of bank fraud and one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering. The organisation’s president has said they would ‘vigorously defend ourselves, our staff, and our work.'” (04/22/26)
- Billionaire investor files fraud lawsuit against Trump crypto venture and claims it’s on “verge of collapse’”
Source: Independent [UK]
“Billionaire businessman Justin Sun has filed a lawsuit against the Trump family’s cryptocurrency venture World Liberty Financial, claiming his multi-million dollar investment was secured through fraud and alleging that WLF is ‘on the verge of collapse.’ Sun claims his tokens have been indefinitely frozen and his voting rights revoked since he refused to accept the terms of a new governance proposal submitted on April 15, which required that 10 percent of all company advisers’ tokens be permanently burned. … The complaint goes on to accuse WLF of making multiple false statements, inducing Sun’s investments through fraud and scheming to secure more capital from him, misrepresenting the company’s compliance with the law, improperly freezing his tokens, making threats and defamation.” (04/22/26)
https://www.the-independent.com/tech/trump-world-liberty-financial-justin-sun-b2962484.html
- UK: Bill would ban anyone born after 2008 from every buying tobacco
Source: Al Jazeera [Qatari state media]
“A new bill approved in the United Kingdom’s legislature will stop people born on or after January 1, 2009 from buying tobacco during their whole lives, as part of a years-long effort by ministers to create a ‘smoke-free generation. Secretary of State for Health and Social Care Wes Streeting introduced the Tobacco and Vapes Bill in the House of Commons in 2024 …. The bill will become law when it receives a royal assent next week. Once it does, ministers will also have new powers to regulate tobacco, vaping and nicotine products, including their flavours and packaging. They will also be able to ban nicotine products from being branded and advertised to children. Vaping will also be prohibited in playgrounds, cars with children inside, outside schools and hospitals, in an effort to expand smoke-free zones across the UK.” (04/22/26)
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/4/22/new-uk-bill-bans-anyone-born-after-2008-from-buying-tobacco
- Report: South Korean fighter jets collided due to pilots taking pictures
Source: BBC News [UK State Media]
“South Korean authorities have found that two fighter jets collided mid-air in 2021 because the pilots were taking pictures and videos. The incident took place while the jets were on a flight mission in the central city of Daegu, according to Seoul’s Board of Audit and Inspection. The pilots survived with no injuries, but the collision damaged the planes, costing the military 880 million won ($596,000; £440,500) in repairs. One of the pilots, who has since left the military, was made to pay a fine of 88 million won. The incident took place because that pilot had wanted to take photos to commemorate his last flight with his military unit.” (04/22/26)
- CO: Federal Immigration Thug Charged With Assaulting Protester
Source: New York Times
“An immigration officer in southwest Colorado who was caught on video grabbing a protester by the hair and hurling her down an embankment last October was charged with assault and criminal mischief on Tuesday, the local district attorney said. The case against the officer, Nicholas Rice, is one of a handful in which local prosecutors have filed criminal charges against federal agents carrying out President Trump’s immigration crackdown. It comes five days after local prosecutors in Minneapolis charged an immigration agent with assault after motorists said he had brandished a gun at them. Sean Murray, the district attorney in the mountain town of Durango, Colo., said he had charged Mr. Rice with third-degree assault, a misdemeanor, and criminal mischief. He said Mr. Rice was charged through a summons, not an arrest warrant.” (04/22/26)
- Researcher believes Noah’s Ark found in Turkey after new underground scans
Source: Fox News
“Researchers working in Turkey say fresh scan data uncovered what appear to be tunnels inside a long-debated landform, bolstering their case that the site may be a manmade object that they believe to be Noah’s Ark. Noah’s Ark Scans researcher Andrew Jones told ‘Fox & Friends First’ on Wednesday that he believes the peculiar formation near Mount Ararat is the real deal. ‘I do believe that this is the real, decayed, buried remains of Noah’s Ark, the famous ship. And we’re doing our best to convince the skeptics and show the world this site,’ he said. Jones said his team’s latest work has revealed tunnels in the landform suggestive of a manmade structure. ‘Our new research has shown that there are tunnels about four meters down and about two meters high, going down the center of the boat and on the inside edge of the hull shape,’ he said.” (04/22/26)
- Nigeria: Tinubu replaces finance minister in surprise reshuffle
Source: Semafor
“Nigerian President Bola Tinubu replaced his finance minister, the architect of a radical economic policy overhaul, less than a year before elections in a surprise reshuffle. Wale Edun, a former World Bank official and investment banker, was replaced by Taiwo Oyedele, a junior finance minister who oversaw a revamp of the country’s tax system, in Tinubu’s most high-profile cabinet reshuffle since taking office three years ago. It was not immediately clear, however, if the move marked a change of direction at the finance ministry. Edun’s tenure has been marked by an aggressive push to overhaul sub-Saharan Africa’s second-largest economy after two recessions within a decade, leading to an uptick in foreign direct investment inflows. However, Nigeria’s debt burden has shot up thanks to increased government spending.” (04/22/26)
- Yours, Mine, or Ours? Liberals Need a Theory of the State
Source: Liberalism.org
by Michael C Munger“In policy debates, some see state action as the obvious solution; others say the same about civil society and/or markets. But listen closely, and you’ll often find that everyone’s gone negative: They have lots of bad things to say about the other side, and not much in favor of their own. That’s the ‘pretty pig’ problem: We can all see the downsides — many of them quite real — with one system, and so we conclude, a bit too quickly, that the other one must be better. As I’ve noted before, that approach leads to disagreement without engagement, as the advocates on both sides ignore the problems of their own preferred system: The state I can imagine is clearly a good solution to the real world commercial system I’m immersed in, but that state doesn’t exist, and its powers are not stable or reliable.” [editor’s note: Nietzsche offered a neat, concise, and true “theory of the state” … “Everything the State says is a lie, and everything it has it has stolen.” – TLK] (04/22/26)
https://www.liberalism.org/p/yours-mine-or-ours-liberals-need-a-theory-of-the-state
- Easier to Die, Harder to Vote: The Rigged Architecture of the Warfare State
Source: Rutherford Institute
by John & Nisha Whitehead“The Trump administration has spent months demonizing immigrants — detaining them, deporting them, tearing apart families, and casting them as threats to national security. And yet, when it comes time to fill the ranks of its endless wars, those same individuals—green card holders, refugees, asylum seekers, even undocumented men—suddenly become expendable assets. Too dangerous to belong. Not too dangerous to die. Increasingly, the same could be said of all of us. We are all being viewed as potential threats by the government. … While the government is making it easier for Americans to be conscripted and killed in war, it is simultaneously working to make it harder for us to have any say in the decisions that send our young men and women to war in the first place.” (04/22/26)
- If you’re forced to pay, it’s theft
Source: Eastern New Mexico News
by Kent McManigal“Taxation is theft. People are free to disagree because everyone is free to be wrong. You might debate what kind of theft it is; whether extortion, a ransom, or an armed robbery, but it’s theft. We used to know it. The story of Robin Hood has morphed into a socialist fairy tale of someone who ‘robbed from the rich and gave to the poor,’ but originally, he was a hero who recovered stolen property from tax collectors and returned it to their victims. Government and other socialists don’t want this story told, for obvious reasons. If you are taking someone’s property — their money — under threat, when they’d rather keep it to use as they see fit, you are a thief.” (04/22/26)
- The Political Weaponization of Overcriminalization Was Entirely Predictable
Source: The UnPopulist
by Matthew Cavedon“Much about our current political era feels unprecedented, especially the sense that the government is targeting people for their political beliefs. In December, President Trump’s Department of Justice ordered the FBI to drastically escalate surveillance of leftist groups. News has also broken that the Biden administration collected data, without a warrant, on Republican senators’ phone calls as part of Jack Smith’s criminal investigation of Jan. 6, taking advantage of inadequate legal protections for data privacy. Republicans and Democrats alike routinely express concern about ‘lawfare,’ the use of unjustified investigations and prosecutions to harass whichever party is out of power. Americans hoping for a deescalation of lawfare should seek to recover the forgotten legacy of the Constitution’s Framers: the safeguards those patriots who knew what it was to be hunted designed for times like these.” (04/22/26)
https://www.theunpopulist.net/p/the-political-weaponization-of-overcriminalizati
- Finally, MAGA figured out who the real Donald Trump is
Source: The Hill
by Max Burns“Millions of Americans were willing to ignore Trump’s destructive personality and growing authoritarianism when they thought his policies would make them rich. In the end, those policies did little more than pick their pockets while enriching Trump’s inner circle of family and friends. The voters who elected him are left to pick up the pieces of their derailed lives as they come to terms with the fact that they were the rubes all along. It’s no wonder his biggest supporters feel duped. … MAGA voters have long believed in taking Trump ‘seriously but not literally.’ This is just another way of saying Trump might lie to other people to advance his own interests, but he would never lie to the supporters who power his political movement. At least some of those faithful Trump supporters are finally ready to admit that they’ve been conned, and there’s no way back to believing the fairy tale.” (04/22/26)
https://thehill.com/opinion/campaign/5841668-maga-infighting-trump-carlson/
- Why Social Change Typically Limits Democracy
Source: Town Hall
by Gregory Lyakhov“The United States was built on a distrust of concentrated power. It is this fundamental distrust of big government that shaped federalism, defined the separation of powers, and limited each branch to a distinct role. During periods of rapid social change, however, governmental restraint weakens. Reform movements (whether in civil rights, economic regulation, or cultural policy) have not only produced legislation but also expanded judicial authority. Social progressivism brings courts to no longer just interpret the law but also reshape it. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 addressed a clear injustice. It prohibited discrimination in employment and public accommodations based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. Congress enacted the law through the democratic process, responding to a national failure to enforce equal protection. While many conservatives criticize the Act’s expansion of federal authority, it came through elected representatives.” (04/22/26)
- The Case Against Efficient Punishment
Source: David Friedman’s Substack
by David Friedman“One way of choosing among different forms of punishment is by how much it costs to impose a given cost on the criminal. Consider first execution. The cost to the criminal is one life. That is also, if we ignore the salary of the hangman or the electric bill for the electric chair, both trivial in comparison, the total cost, so the ratio of total cost to amount of deterrence is about one. The same would be true for a corporal punishment such as a flogging. Next consider imprisonment, one of the two common forms of criminal punishment in modern societies.” (04/22/26)
https://daviddfriedman.substack.com/p/the-case-against-efficient-punishment
- How the Medicare Wage Index disadvantages rural areas
Source: Niskanen Center
by Shriya Garg“The one-year anniversary of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) has renewed attention to the financial stability of rural hospitals. The sweeping legislation made significant changes to Medicaid funding and eligibility, effects of which are still coming into focus for rural facilities. But the OBBBA is only the latest chapter in a longer story. The structural forces most responsible for rural hospitals’ financial precarity predate the law by decades.” (04/22/26)
https://www.niskanencenter.org/how-the-medicare-wage-index-disadvantages-rural-areas
- Asia’s expanding circle of security
Source: Christian Science Monitor
by staff“For the first time since World War II, Japanese combat troops are participating in live-fire, land-and-sea military exercises in an Asian country that was once under the harsh rule of imperial Japan. On Monday, some 1,400 Japanese soldiers joined with the forces of a few other democracies around the Pacific to practice mock battles for 19 days in the northern Philippines – not far from China and the islands it forcibly claims in the South China Sea. … For Japan, this overseas training under real-world conditions marks a historic turning point for its postwar pacifist tradition and its heavy reliance on the United States for external defense. Yet, on a larger scale, it puts on display a long-term effort by many Asian democracies and their Western partners to define the meaning of shared security, preferably the kind that cannot be seen as ganging up on China.” (04/21/26)
https://www.csmonitor.com/Editorials/the-monitors-view/2026/0421/Asia-s-expanding-circle-of-security
- War has significantly altered major Trump meeting with Xi
Source: Responsible Statecraft
by Lyle J Goldstein“Rather than a clash, these titans are likely tempered by the Middle East war. The question, who now has the better advantage?” (04/22/26)
- What Dr Oz says about Trump’s diet may surprise his harshest critics
Source: Fox News
by Dr. Marc Siegel“I have known cardiologist Dr. Mehmet Oz, administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, for many years. I’ve interviewed him multiple times on my show, ‘Doctor Radio Reports’ on SiriusXM, and have also spent time around the dinner table with him and his family. … Dr. Oz spends a lot of time with President Donald Trump these days as they travel to and attend events together. He told me recently on my show that he is struck by how clever and funny the president is and how he doesn’t actually have a bad diet.” (04/22/26)
https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/dr-marc-siegel-dr-oz-says-trumps-diet-may-surprise-harshest-critics
- New Partnerships in Asia
Source: Foundation for Economic Education
by Jake Scott“In February 2026, Indonesia and Australia signed the Treaty on Common Security (‘the Jakarta Treaty’), a commitment to developing joint training facilities in Indonesia, increased cooperation and information sharing, and consulting on security matters at ministerial level between the two countries. But in the last two months, this already important agreement gained greater significance, as it has expanded to include Papua New Guinea (PNG) and Japan. It seems that a new security paradigm and new trade partnerships are emerging in the Pacific.” (04/22/26)
- Manipulators Understand That Narrative Control Is Everything
Source: Caitlin Johnston
by Caitlin Johnstone“They understand that humans are storytelling animals whose inner lives are typically dominated by mental narratives about what’s happening, so if you can control those narratives, you can control the humans.” (04/22/26)
- The Government Failed at Bondi, Now It Punishes the People
Source: Brownstone Institute
by Andrew Lowenthal“On December 14, two ISIS-affiliated gunmen massacred 15 unarmed civilians at a Hanukkah festival at Bondi Beach, the icon of Australia’s breezy way of life. Just three police officers guarded the festival. One of the shooters, Naveed Akram, had come to the attention of the Australian security services in 2019, and yet in 2020, his father, an Indian-born non-citizen, was able to legally purchase multiple firearms. Just weeks before their murder spree, the father and son duo spent nearly a month in the Southern Philippines, a hot spot for Islamic terrorism. … To cover for their incompetence, the government is now proposing a host of laws to restrict speech, protest, and gun ownership (Australia already has some of the world’s strictest gun laws).” (04/22/26)
https://brownstone.org/articles/the-government-failed-at-bondi-now-it-punishes-the-people/
- Why America Stopped Annexing Territory
Source: Law & Liberty
by Mark Kawar“When Donald Trump first suggested that the United States should purchase Greenland, the reaction in Washington was disbelief mixed with ridicule. The United States, it had seemed, long ago settled its borders. Territorial expansion belonged to a different era. Yet in the longer arc of American history, expansion has been quite normal. For much of the nation’s first century and a half, Americans debated not whether the United States should grow, but where and by what means. The idea that borders might shift was a routine feature of statecraft. So why does the idea now seem so strange?” 904/22/26)
https://lawliberty.org/why-america-stopped-annexing-territory/
- My Vision For A Post-Trump America
Source: Persuasion
by Francis Fukuyama“Now that Donald Trump is visibly weakening, it’s important to start thinking seriously about what comes after him. It’s no secret that I’ve been a big fan of the Abundance movement, which was popularized by Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson last year in a book by that name. The core of Abundance is to rebuild American state capacity and create a government that can build things once again. At the top of the list are housing and infrastructure — public goods that will make significant dents in the affordability crisis for ordinary Americans.” [editor’s note: Even if there were such a thing as a “public good,” housing wouldn’t be one — it’s neither non-rivalrous nor non-excludable – TLK] (04/22/26)
https://www.persuasion.community/p/my-vision-for-a-post-trump-america
- From Fatal Conceit to the Friendly Skies: How Deregulation Made Flight Affordable
Source: The Daily Economy
by Jeffery L Degner“For decades, federal regulators controlled airline prices and routes, limiting competition and keeping fares high. The Airline Deregulation Act changed everything.” (04/22/26)
- The Iranians can’t be allowed to string us along much longer
Source: New York Post
by staff“You can credit President Trump with taking extreme risks for the sake of a possible peace, but we fear he’s simply putting off the inevitable by giving Tehran another cease-fire extension. At the least, he should set a deadline of a day or two for the Islamic Republic’s factions to agree on an offer; if they can’t do it fast, they never will. Caveat: The president has access to intelligence he can’t share; that we can’t make clear sense of his decision Tuesday doesn’t remotely mean he was wrong to delay a return to active operations. Still, his stated reasons don’t add up: So what if Pakistan’s leaders asked Washington to hold off until the Iranians ‘can come up with a unified proposal?'” [editor’s note: Anything but declaring “victory” — despite it actually being a fiasco — and knocking off is a stupid idea – TLK] (04/21/26)
https://nypost.com/2026/04/21/opinion/the-iranians-cant-be-allowed-to-string-us-along-much-longer/
- Democrats put unions over families with public schools bill
Source: USA Today
by Ingrid Jacques“The tax credit program does not draw from existing public school funding streams. Instead, it gives families access to privately funded scholarships they can use for a range of educational needs.” (04/22/26)
- Rothbard Was Right: Libertarians Must Never Warm to the Warfare State
Source: Ludwig von Mises Institute
by Connor O’Keeffe“In 1977, Murray Rothbard wrote an article in response to an issue of Reason Magazine where the main feature of the month was a debate between interventionism and non-interventionism. The bulk of the 3,000-word article is spent tearing apart the two pieces by alleged libertarians who are advocating an interventionist foreign policy. But, before he dives in, Rothbard devotes some time to attacking the idea that this should even be up for debate within libertarian circles at all …” (04/22/26)
https://mises.org/mises-wire/rothbard-was-right-libertarians-must-never-warm-warfare-state
- The Price of a Lost Russia: A Correspondent’s Eulogy
Source: Washington Monthly
by Markos Kounalakis“More than three decades after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the promise of a democratic Russia has given way to something much darker — and far more durable.” (04/22/26)
- Replacing student loans with sponsorship
Source: Adam Smith Institute
by Madsen Pirie“Please excuse me for returning yet again to a solution to the UK student loans system. At present, graduates are burdened with debt that can climb, despite repayments, because of interest charges. It would be difficult for taxpayers to fund student costs, given that it would involve poorer people (for the most part) paying higher taxes so that those less poor could be given access to higher incomes in later life. The money has to come from somewhere, but if not from students themselves or taxpayers, then from whom? The obvious answer is business sponsorship of students.” (04/22/26)
https://www.adamsmith.org/blog/replacing-student-loans-with-sponsorship
- Apocalypse Soon?
Source: Quillette
by Henry I Miller“Earth Day once helped focus public attention on real environmental problems. Today it is a festival of alarmism, misanthropy, technophobia, and moral theatrics.” (04/22/26)
https://quillette.com/2026/04/22/apocalypse-soon-earth-day-2026-rachel-carson/
- Led by Republicans, Americans’ Support for NATO Fades
Source: Reason
by JD Tuccille“President Donald Trump’s doubts about the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) date back at least to the 1980s, when he took out full-page newspaper ads questioning the value of defending prosperous allies capable of paying for their own security. So, when he voices frustration with the alliance and the lack of support among its members for the U.S. and Israeli campaign against Iran’s theocratic regime, it’s not a new development. What’s new is growing disenchantment with NATO among Americans, led by the president’s Republican supporters.” (04/22/26)
https://reason.com/2026/04/22/led-by-republicans-americans-support-for-nato-fades/
- Reality Proves Again & Again Trump’s Attack on Iran Was Horrible Decision
Source: Common Dreams
by Mel Gurtov“As another week of Trump’s war begins, it becomes ever more clear that all his presumptions about how the war would go have proven wrong. Iran’s economy has bent but not folded despite a blockade of its ports. Its ability to control the Strait of Hormuz hasn’t been eliminated. Iran still has drones and missiles for retaliatory attacks. The regime’s control of the population remains. Gas prices and the cost of oil remain high. The war goes on. Trump’s deadline on the cease-fire expires April 22. Will Vice President JD Vance travel to Islamabad for a second round of talks with Iran? … The only certainty is in Trump’s mind: that Iran has ‘no choice. We’ve taken out their navy, we’ve taken out their air force, we’ve taken out their leaders,’ he said on his social media. He just doesn’t get it.” (04/22/26)
https://www.commondreams.org/opinion/iran-war-was-trump-mistake
- Rising, 04/22/26
Source: The Hill
“Robby Soave gives his radar on San Francisco cracking down on crime in its public transportation system, and how he thinks it can serve as a model for other cities.” (04/22/26)
- Ron Paul Liberty Report, 04/22/26
Source: Ron Paul Liberty Report
“Trump Blinks, But Hormuz Blockade Blocks Further Talks.” (04/22/26)
- The Caplan-Khan Culture Convo
Source: Bet On It
“A candid talk with the iconoclastic geneticist.” (04/22/26)
- Reason Interview: Jennifer Doleac
Source: Reason
“Prison Doesn’t Work the Way You Think.” (04/22/26)
https://reason.com/podcast/2026/04/22/prison-doesnt-work-the-way-you-think/
- Reasonably Optimistic, 04/22/26
Source: Washington Post
“How Americans developed an unhealthy relationship with the Supreme Court.” (04/22/26)
- The Political Orphanage, 04/22/26
Source: The Political Orphanage
“Your Friends Are Wrong About the Supreme Court: Sarah Isgur.” (04/22/26)
https://politicalorphanage.libsyn.com/your-friends-are-wrong-about-the-supreme-court-sarah-isgur
- JFK Live, 04/22/26
Source: JFK Facts
“The Future of Rep. Luna’s Task Force, the Role of AI, and the Elusive Wiegman Film.” (04/22/26)
https://jfkfacts.substack.com/p/jfk-live-the-future-of-rep-lunas
- The Remnant with Jonah Goldberg, 04/22/26
Source: The Dispatch
“America’s Greatest Public Servant | Interview: Bob Crawford.” (04/22/26)
https://thedispatch.com/podcast/remnant/americas-greatest-public-servant-interview-bob-crawford/
- The Daily Blast With Greg Sargent, 04/22/26
Source: The New Republic
“Trump Press Sec Goes Full Cult as Damning War Leaks Humiliate Him Anew.” (04/22/26)
- Politico Playbook Audio Briefing, 04/22/26
Source: Politico
“Maps, midterms and another Trump plan for Iran.” (04/22/26)
- Cato Daily Podcast, 04/21/26
Source: Cato Institute
“The Surveillance Program Congress Can’t Quit.” (04/21/26)
https://www.cato.org/multimedia/cato-podcast/surveillance-program-congress-cant-quit
- The Headlines, 04/22/26
Source: New York Times
“Democrats Win Big in Election Map Fight, and Influencers Push Nicotine as a Health Hack.” (04/22/26)
- Fountain Forum, episode 439
Source: Fountain Forum
“Jason Sorens on why housing is expensive.” (04/22/26)
https://rumble.com/v78toow-ff-439-jason-sorens-on-why-housing-is-expensive.html